The Sunday Poem: Mitch Rayes... Postcard from Chiapas

For eight seasons Albuquerque poet Mitch Rayes outfitted jungle trips to remote rivers and ruins in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas. He first arrived there in 1979 and for almost two decades spent a large portion of his time in an area of Chiapas inhabited by a small group of indigenous Maya known as the Lacandones. His most recent poems are based on reminiscences of those years.

Born in Detroit, he made his first visit to New Mexico on a family vacation in 1970. Later, after attending Wayne State and Naropa, he returned to live here and alternate his time in Mexico. As the founder of Flaming Tongues and producer of the Albuquerque Poetry Festivals in the late 1990s, his name has long been a familiar one on the Albuquerque poetry scene.

Lacanja

hammock slung in a lacandon hut
a kerosene lamp burns
on the table in the corner

the floor is dirt
the walls are sticks
thatch roof
dark and fragrant
from years of open hearth